The Best-Laid Plans
When this team’s good work had a bad side effect, help from an improvement advisor got it back on track.
When this team’s good work had a bad side effect, help from an improvement advisor got it back on track.
Call centers across Kaiser Permanente band together across time zones to improve customer service, spread successful practices. From the Spring 2015 Hank.
This poster, which appears in the November/December 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, features an infographic on ideas for how your team can bring the patient's voice into your performance improvement efforts.
How patient advisory councils are helping improve service and quality by giving a members a forum for sharing their experiences and contributing their ideas. From the Fall 2014 Hank.
Kaiser Permanente is inviting patients and families into the boardroom to talk turkey. There’s no sugar-coating a bad experience or making excuses for less-than-stellar service. Listening to our patients has become a core value, and patient advisory councils are one of the ways KP is bringing the patient into the conversation to improve care.
“There are over 35 advisory councils and over 400 patient advisors throughout the organization,” says Hannah King, the director of service quality for unit-based teams.
In the Northwest, as in other regions, the work being done by the councils is affecting outcomes. Within six months of the formation of the Oncology Patient Advisory Council, for example, oncology patient satisfaction scores climbed 6.5 percent. One change prompted by patient feedback was a fresh look at a procedure that sometimes is used in the course of a surgical breast biopsy. After hearing from patients about the pain they were experiencing, physicians standardized the wire localization procedure to reduce pain.
One of the newest councils in the Northwest was created to help serve the region’s growing Hispanic population. Patients on the council have been involved in a video project that will be ready to share with staff by year-end. In the video, Latino patients talk directly to KP care teams about their culture, providing insights into how to build trust and develop good provider-patient relationships.
Patients who serve on the councils are not paid to participate. “These are people who are invested in helping us succeed,” says Jonathan Bullock, program manager for Patient and Family Centered Care Programs in the Northwest.
Given the complexity of an organization as big as Kaiser Permanente, there’s been a learning curve for patients as well. At a recent council meeting in the Northwest, patients expressed frustration that a suggestion to improve signage hadn’t happened. As it turned out, their idea had been incorporated into the master plan—but there’s a schedule for updating signage, and the clinic they were familiar with wasn’t due yet for a refresh.
Check out the presentations from the teams participating in the virtual UBT fair on involving patients in performance improvement.
This poster, which appears on the back cover of the Summer 2014 Hank, features information to assist in welcoming new Kaiser Permanente members.
This poster, which appears in the July/August 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights the elements of the Nurse Knowledge Exchange Plan and can be shared during your UBT meetings to engage your team on how to implement this process.
Format:
PDF
Size:
8.5” x 11”
Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians
Best used:
This poster features information to assist in welcoming new Kaiser Permanente members, and should be posted on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.
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This poster, which appears in the March/April 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, features information that will help the new members feel welcomed.
A poster of the Value Compass, which puts the member and patient at the center of everything we do and is used as a guide for decision making and problem solving.
The team on the 2-South Med-Surg unit at Sunnyside Hospital shines. Patient satisfaction scores have climbed over time as a result of numerous tests of change. Watch this short video to find out how a once-troubled department turned its culture around to sustain high performance.
The 2-South Med-Surg unit-based team at Sunnyside Medical Center in the Northwest has created a culture of high performance—but it wasn’t always that way. Before they could get to a place where team members are comfortable running simultaneous tests of change on multiple service projects, they had to overcome poor morale and staff churn. This is the story of how by changing team culture, the 2-South UBT sustains high performance.